Plaintiff physicians appeal the District Court’s grant of summary judgment dismissing their claim that the defendants, Northern Michigan Hospitals, Inc., and the Burns Clinic Medical Center, P.C., had violated sections 1 and 2 of the Sherman Antitrust Act. 1 We affirm the summary judgment on appellants’ 2 section 1 and 2 claims involving conspiracy but reverse and remand appellants’ section 2 monopolization and attempted monopolization claims against the Burns Clinic for further consideration by the District Court. 3
On June 1, 1977 the Little Traverse and Lockwood-MacDonald hospitals of Petoskey, Michigan merged to form Northern Michigan Hospitals, Inc. (NMH), one of two defendants in this lawsuit. 4 The second defendant, Burns Clinic Medical Center, P.C. (Burns Clinic), is a multi-specialty professional corporation of which 90% of the doctors and nearly all of the specialists in Petoskey are members. The plaintiffs are independent physicians formerly on the Lockwood-MacDonald staff who became members of the NMH staff with the merger. All of the plaintiffs, еxcept one, practice or had practiced family medicine in Petoskey. 5
After the merger in 1977, the emergency rooms of Little Traverse and Lockwood-MacDonald were consolidated into one facility at the Little Traverse division of NMH. It is not claimed that the consolidation was undertaken for other than legitimate medical and financial reasons. However, appellants assert that the method of staffing the consolidated emergency facility and hospital practices with respect to referrals of emergency room patients, violated and continues to violate the antitrust laws. Three practices at NMH form the basis of the appellants’ complaints. 6
The appellants first challenge the award of an exclusive contract to the Burns Clinic for the provision of emergency room services. Shortly after the merger, NMH determined, through a staff committee comprised of both Burns Clinic and independent
The second practice complained of involves NMH’s system of referring uncommitted emergency room patients for followup care. Under this system, emergency room patients who do not have or do not prefer a particular doctor in the community are referred, in accordance with the medical judgment of the emergency room physician, to an “on-call” NMH physician in the appropriate area of medical expertise. All physicians on the NMH staff, including the appellants, share rotation on the “on-call” list and theoretically would receive a “fair-share” of those uncommitted patients requiring follow-up care in the area of medicine they practice. The appellants, however, assert that the referral system, while fair on its face, was applied in a discriminatory fashion from 1977 to 1978 before NMH instituted formal auditing. This discriminatory application of the referral system is alleged to have been designed to drive the appellants out of the practice of medicine in Petoskey, in violation of both sections 1 and 2 of the Sherman Act.
Finally, the appellants assert that NMH’s so-called “pediatrician rule” violates sections 1 and 2. This rule requires that medical emergencies involving children 14 and younger, who have no physician, be treated by a pediatrician. All of the pediatricians in Petoskey are with Burns Clinic. 9 A similar rule had been in effect at the Little Traverse emergency room since 1955. The rule was, in a manner not clearly disclosed by the record, continued at NMH after merger and consolidation of emergency room services. 10 Appellants allege that the rule was continued at NMH at the behest of Burns Clinic pediatricians with whom the appellants compete directly for the general or “primary” treatment of children. Although there are no pediatricians among the non-Burns Clinic physicians, all of the appellants enjoy or enjoyed pediatric privileges at NMH and assert that they are and were fully qualified to treat many of the children in the emergency room who are automatically treated by Burns Clinic pediatricians.
On appeal the appellants assert three grounds for reversal. First, the District Court erroneously failed to apply the more stringent standard for summary judgment appropriate in antitrust actions. Second, the court ignored substantial evidence from which a reasonable jury could infer a conspiracy to eliminate the appellants from acute care practice and to monopolize such services in the Petoskey market. Finally, the District Court erroneously failed to premise its decision on economic analysis and instead accepted the defendants’ incantation of medical justifications.
While there is some merit to the appellants’ first and third assertions of legal error, we nevertheless find that summary judgment was appropriate on appellants’ section 1 and 2 conspiracy claims. Because the District Court’s inquiry on appellants’ section 2 monopolizatiоn and attempted monopolization claims is incomplete, we remand for further development of those claims.
Summary Judgment in Antitrust Litigation
Both the Supreme Court and this Circuit have expressed a clear reluctance to dispose of antitrust litigation on motions for summary judgment.
E.g., Poller v. Columbia Broadcasting System, Inc.,
Summary procedures should be used sparingly in complex antitrust litigation where motive and intent play leading roles, the proof is largely in the hands of the alleged conspirators, and hostile witnesses thicken the plot.
The District Court interpreted language in
First National Bank,
To the extent that petitioner’s burden-of-proof argument can be interpreted to suggest that Rule 56(e) should, in effect, be read out of antitrust cases and permitplaintiffs to get to a jury on the basis of the allegations in their complaints, coupled with the hope that something can be developed at trial in the way of evidence to support those allegations, we decline to accept it. While we recognize the importance of preserving litigants’ rights to a trial on their claims, we are not prepared to extend those rights to the point of requiring that anyone who files an antitrust complaint setting forth a valid cause of action be entitled to a full-dress trial notwithstanding the absence of any significant probative evidence tending to support the complaint.
Id.
at 289-90,
The lesson learned from
Poller
and
First National Bank
is that, although the court should treat antitrust plaintiffs leniently in examining their proofs for issues of fact on a summary judgment motion, those proofs must nonetheless provide some factual basis upon which the conspiracy and intent elements may be reasonably inferred.
11
Once the defendant has adequately rebutted the plaintiff’s allegations by establishing legitimate alternative explanations for its conduct which disprove the inferences the plaintiffs seek to draw, then the plaintiffs must come forward with some “significant probative evidence tending to support the complaint.”
First National Bank,
Although the District Court in the present case appears to have misinterpreted the effect of First National Bank on summary judgment standards in antitrust litigation, this error does not require reversal. The defendants have provided a number of legitimate alternative explanations for their conduct which adequately rebut the inferences of intent and conspiracy alleged by the plaintiffs. And by affidavit and reference to their depositions they have denied under oath the existence of any conspiracy. The appellants have failed to advance any “significant probative evidence” in response which would provide a sufficient factual basis to withstand summary judgment even under the more lenient standard. We, therefore, reject the appellants’ second and more dispositive asserted error, that the District Court ignored substantial рrobative evidence from which a jury could infer a conspiracy to violate the antitrust laws. Appellants’ section 1 claims are treated first.
Appellants’ Section 1 Claims
The three practices of NMH alleged to violate section 1 of the Sherman Antitrust Act are (1) discriminatory application of the NMH’s emergency room referral system from 1977 to 1979; (2) continuation of a “pediatrician rule” requiring emergency room patients 14 years old and younger who exhibit medical as opposed to traumatic injury to be seen by a pediatrician; and (3) the grant of an exclusive contract to the
To establish a violation of section 1 of the Act the plaintiff must establish that the defendants combined or conspired with an intent to unreasonably restrain trade.
12
E.g., Perma Life Mufflers, Inc.
v.
International Parts Corp.,
(1) The Referral System:
Under the NMH emergency room referral system the emergency room physician who initially examines patients must determine whether follow-up treatment is needed, and if so, what type of care would be medically prudent. Victims of heart disease are presumably referred to heart specialists, broken bones are sent to orthopedists, and more common problems referred to generalists or family practitioners. If a patient has no local physician, a referral is made to the physician “on-call” on a rotating list of physicians which includes appellants in the appropriate category of medical care as determined by the individual emergency room physician.
That the rule is fair on its face is undisputed. However, the appellants claim that they have been deprived of their “fair share” of these referrals through inconsistent application of the rules. We will assume that this may, in fact, have been true. Such dеprivation alone, however, would not constitute a violation of section 1. The appellant must provide some factual basis upon which to find that the ostensibly independent referral decisions of the emergency room physicians are part of some concerted design between the two defendants or one defendant and some other conspirator. They have not done so.
The appellants have not alleged knowledge much less participation on the
The appellants advance the theory that the emergency room staff, all members of the Burns Clinic, conspired with other specialists in the Burns Clinic who stood to directly benefit from the alleged improper diversion of referrals. Appellant’s theory directly contradicts the traditional rule that “[t]wo or more individual officers, directors or agents within a corporation, acting on behalf of that corporation, are considered incapable of conspiring with each other or with their corporation, for § 1 purposes.”
Harvey v. Fearless Farris Wholesale, Inc.,
There has been no showing to support even an inference of an understanding, explicit or tacit, between the Burns Clinic specialists and the Burns Clinic emergency room staff. Indeed, plaintiffs’ own evidence indicates that, if in fact referrals to specialists predominated emergency room referrals, it was because the emergency room doctors believed specialists were better qualified to undertake the follow-up care required. Thus, even if we were to find that the circumstances of this case warranted looking beyond the corporate form of the Burns Clinic, there would nonetheless be insufficient evidence of the required plurality of action and meeting of the minds.
It is true that the income of specialists in the clinic depends, in part, upon each physician’s individual billing contribution to the clinic. However, even were we to accept the dubious proposition that such income constitutes a personal independent stake, only the specialists are in a position to benefit from discrimination in referrals in a manner independent of the advancement of
Appellants also ask that we disregard the corporate structure of the Burns Clinic because it is a professional corporation. Appellants argue that because the Michigan Professional Service Corporations Act
18
provides that an officer, stockholder, agent or employee of such corporation remains personally liable for his or her acts while rendering professional care, doctor members of a professional corporation should be treated as individuals for antitrust purposes. We see no reason to treat professional corporations in any different manner than any other corporation. Group practice by professional corporations is a common method of delivering health care. Such corporations are lawfully organized.
19
The professional corporation has the same needs as any corporation to have its officers, members and employees engage in concerted activity. As with every corporation, it cannot exist unless its shareholder members can agree among themselves with respect to all aspects of its operation. It is recognition of this need which forms the basis for the rule that since a corporation cannot combine or conspire with itself, the acts of a corporation acting through its directors, officers, and employees are not generally subject to condemnation under section 1.
Greenville Publishing Co.,
Appellants raise the specter of doctors incorporating for the purpose of avoiding the antitrust laws. However, the agreement to form a corporation for that
(2) NMH Pediatrician Rule:
The second anti-competitive practice of the defendants alleged to be the result of an illegal combination concerns the existence of a “pediatrician rule” at the NMH emergency room. This rule requires that all emergency patients 14 years of age or younger, who have no family physician, must be seen by a pediatrician if they suffer from a medical problem as opposed to a traumatic injury. The Burns Clinic had instituted the rule originally at the Little Traverse emergency room in 1955, and it was apparently adopted or continued by NMH in its present form sometime after merger and consolidation. 21
The appellants’ claim is essentially that the rule unnecessarily eliminates their access to a certain segment of the new patient population treated at the NMH emergency room. Since the appellants have pediatric privileges at NMH they are in direct competition with pediatricians insofar as the routine treatmеnt of children are concerned. Yet, the rule requires that only a pediatrician be called whether or not the individual case is also actually within the acknowledged capabilities of the family practitioners.
We agree with the appellants that the pediatrician rule may in theory 22 restrain competition between family practitioners and pediatric specialists. The appellants have failed, however, to provide any factual basis upon which a jury might find the prerequisite concerted activity for a section 1 violation. Although the record is not clear, it appears that the decision to continue the Little Traverse pediatrician rule was made by the NMH board of directors upon the endorsement of the NMH executive committee and an emergency room subcommittee formed of both Burns Clinic and independent doctors. However, no record of these committeе meetings or other evidence has been offered which even implies that continuation of the rule was other than solely the product of NMH’s singular efforts to provide appropriate medical care. The appellants have again failed to provide probative evidence tending to infer the existence of a conspiracy sufficient to withstand summary judgment.
(3) Exclusive Emergency Room Contact:
The final act of the defendants alleged to be a concerted effort to unreasonably restrain trade is the award of an exclusive contract to provide emergency services at NMH to a small group of Burns Clinic physicians. Sometime after consolidation of the Little Traverse and Lockwood-MacDonald emergency rooms NMH determined that the consolidated services should be operated by a small group of full-time emergency room specialists. The appellants,
Not all exclusive dealing contracts even by a monopolist are illegal.
23
See, e.g., Harron v. United Hospital Center, Inc.,
In the present case NMH has only one emergency room through which to provide emergency services to the public. It was required to choose among alternative methods of providing this service in an effective, efficient and medically prudent manner. We agree with the District Court that the defendаnt NMH chose to staff its consolidated emergency room with full-time specialists in emergency care for undisputedly legitimate financial and medical reasons. The appellants have failed to present any evidence which would contradict NMH’s manifestly legitimate and well-supported justification that full-time specialists trained as emergency room physicians provide medical services superior to those of generalists who rotate on a part-time basis while maintaining full private practices.
The appellants’ analogy to the “bottle neck” theory exemplified by cases such as
United States v. Terminal Railroad Association,
The “non-competitive” nature of emergency room services also supports the legitimacy of exclusive contracts for their provision under the antitrust laws. Patients may conceivably choose between two competing hospitals in seeking emergency services, depending upon the proximity of the hospitals and the nature of their injuries. The patient necessarily has only limited choices as to how that service is to be provided, however, once a certain hospital has been selected. Presumably the fees
To the extent that exclusive contracts for emergency room services may adversely affect the practice of medicine by reducing the number of new patient referrals, that effect is ancillary and uniform among all competing physicians on the NMH staff. The system of referrals at the NMH emergency room is, without dispute, a fair means of distributing such new patients among the various physicians on the NMH staff including the appellants. Nor can the appellants legitimately complain that NMH has collusively or unfairly awarded its exclusive emergency room contract to the Burns Clinic. Appellants, by their own admission, failed to submit bids for the emergency room contract and were unwilling to staff the service on the required full-time basis.
Appellants’ Section 2 Claims:
The appellants’ various assertions of antitrust liability include ill-defined claims of monopolization, attempted monopolization and a conspiracy to monopolize in violation of section 2 of the Sherman Act. 25 The claim of a conspiracy to monopolize fails for the same reason as did the appellants’ section 1 claims; there has been no factual basis presented upon which to reasonably infer the existence of a conspiracy in view of the legitimate explanations for defendant’s conduct. The appellants’ remaining section 2 claims, however, may be established solely by unilateral actions of the defendants. We agree with the District Court that these remaining section 2 claims are somewhat speculative. However, because the court failed to fully develop the initial factual issues concerning relevant product and geographic markets, summary disposition of appellants’ monopolization and attempted monopolization was premature. We therefore, remand the section 2 claim against the Burns Clinic to the District Court for further development. 26
To establish the offense of monopolization a plaintiff must show that a defendant either unfairly attained or maintained monopoly power.
United States
v.
Grinnell Corp.,
An attempted monopolization occurs when a competitor, with a “dangerous probability of success,” engages in anti-competitive practices the specific design of which are, to build a monopoly or exclude or destroy competition.
See Times-Picayune Publishing Co.
v.
United States,
In order to succeed on either a monopolization or attempt to monopolize claim plaintiffs must establish the relevant product and geographic markets in which they compete with the alleged monopolizers.
See, e.g., United States v. Grinnell Corp.,
In the present case the District Court granted summary judgment on appellants’ section 2 claims because it found that neither defendant enjoyed monopoly power in a market in which appellants compete.
As to NMH we agree. It is beyond question that NMH does not compete in any fashion with the appellants. Indeed, the appellants have not so alleged. 27 Accordingly, NMH must on remand be dismissed as a defendant to this lawsuit.
There is, however, no evidence provided by the present record to contradict the appellants’ allegations thаt competition exists between appellants and the Burns Clinic for referral patients from the NMH emergency room. It is true, as the District Court points out, that Burns Clinic provides specialized secondary care medicine almost exclusively. The appellants, on the other hand, are all, except one, family practitioners whose services center on the delivery of primary care. However, there may exist, as the appellants allege, 28 an area of overlap at which these two broad classifications of medicine compete. Appellants, for example, have a wide-range of privileges at NMH for treating medical problems that might also be treated by a Bums Clinic specialist.
If the evidence shows that this area of overlap properly constitutes a relevant discernible market,
29
then a summary disposition of the appellants’ monopolization and attemрted monopolization claims was inappropriate. The Burns Clinic has an obvious, but legitimately obtained monopoly in Petoskey
30
over the delivery of acute care medicine to the extent it is delivered through an emergency room.
31
If this is a submarket ^and if the Burns Clinic has utilized this monopoly power unfairly to either exclude competition for emergency room
Economic Analysis of Antitrust Claims Against the Professions
The appellants also argue that the District Court erred by failing to premise its decision on economic analysis. While the appellants’ argument accurately states the law, the appellants mischaracterize the District Court’s opinion. The court premised its judgment on appellants section 1 claims primarily upon the appellants’ failure to provide any factual basis upon which to reasonably infer the prerequisite concerted action. The court also emphasized that the defendants had offered substantial medical justifications to contradict any potential inferences of either concerted action or an intent to restrain trade. In this the District Court was perfectly correct. In the absence of legitimate explanation for conduct a fact finder may be warranted in drawing an inference that the anti-competitive conduct resulted from concerted activity and an improper motive.
34
However, such an inference is not permissible when there is persuasive evidence of legitimate purposes or other explanation which negates that inference.
See, e.g., Times-Picayune,
Affirmed in part, Reversed in part, and Remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
Notes
.
Smith v. Northern Michigan Hospitals, Inc.,
. The five plaintiff physicians will be referred to, for convenience, interchangeably as either “plaintiffs” or “appellants.”
. All claims against defendant Northern Michigan Hospitals must be dismissed under our disposition of this case. See text, infra, at p. 26.
. One major impetus for this merger was the desire of Little Traverse to expand its facilities. To do so required the approval of the regional Health Systems Agency and the Michigan Department of Public Health. Lockwood-MacDonald at the same time had excess capacity. The Michigan Department of Public Health approved a scaled down version of Little Traverse expansion conditioned on the merger taking place.
. Three of the five plaintiff physicians left the Petoskey area subsequent to the merger of the two former hospitals. Dr. DePuydt left Petoskey on June 1, 1979, and Dr. Foster moved to Indiana in August of that same year. Dr. Taylor moved his practice to Cheboygan, Michigan on October 17,1977, prior to any of the allegedly anti-competitive acts now complained of had occurred. His claims must be dismissed on this basis alone.
. The appellants’ theories for recovery have shifted as the case has developed through almost two years of discovery. Initially, the appellants challenged both the merger and the consolidation of emergency rooms. These claims were dropped prior to the District Court’s grant of summary judgment.
. Prior to the merger the emergency room at Lockwood-MacDonald was staffed by various independent physicians including appellants on a rotating part-time basis. The emergency room at Little Traverse was staffed by Burns Clinic under an exclusive contract.
. The cost differential between the only two competitors, Burns and the Williams Group, was apparently minimal. NMH awarded the contract to the Burns Clinic on the basis of prior favorable experience with the Burns emergency room physicians and a strong NMH staff preference for “in house” staffing.
. Although the rule does not require treatment by a Burns Clinic pediatrician, that is, in fact, its practical effect. The record reveals that an independent pediatrician has investigated setting up practice in Petoskey but has not done so. He was offered staff privileges but Burns Clinic pediatricians were unwilling to cover for him on weekends or emergencies.
. The hospital also requires mandatory consultations with a pediatrician for all patients who are admitted with certain medical problems, e.g., Cesarean section and neonatal care infants require an attending physician. The appellants vaguely complain of these rules but fail to specify how such manifestly reasonable medical practice requirements imposed by the hospital are in any way violative of the antitrust laws. Such rules, therefore, play no part in our disposition of the appellants’ claims.
. The Seventh Circuit in
Weit v. Continental Ill. National Bank & Trust Co.,
. The medical profession is, of course, not exempt from application of the antitrust laws.
E.g., Arizona v. Maricopa County Medical Society,
The Supreme Court has not delineated exactly when or how the special circumstances relevant to learned professions should properly affect application of the antitrust laws. In
National Society of Professional Engineers,
the Court reasserted the basic principle that the focus of inquiry in any antitrust analysis is confined to consideration of “thе challenged restraint’s impact on competitive conditions.”
In the present case, since there is no evidence to support an inference of the required concerted action, it is not necessary to consider what effect, if any, the defendants’ potential medical justifications would have on a rule of reason analysis.
. The results of these audits found that only a small number of errors had actually been made.
. Although often referred to as the “intra-enterprise” theory of conspiracy, the exception at issue in this case is distinct from those cases in which conspiracy is alleged to exist among the' vertically related corporate subsidiaries of a defendant parent corporation.
See, e.g., Perma Life Mufflers v. International Parts Corp.,
. There are rather substantial policy reasons for not adopting such an exception. See Note, “Conspiring Entities” Under Section 1 of the Sherman Act, 95 Harv.L.Rev. 661 (1981-82) (summarizing the policy aspects of the intraenterprise doctrine of corporation conspiracies).
. The present case should be distinguished from the
Nurse Midwifery
and
Delta Dental Plan
cases cited by the appellants. In those cases the corporations involved were incorporated associations of independent physician members created to provide health care insurance programs. These corporate entities served purposes other than the actual physical delivery of health care services by member physicians. Each participating physician in the incorporated association maintained the actual practiсe of their profession independent of that corporate body. Under these circumstances, the independent personal stake of either conspirator is apparent.
Compare Virginia Academy,
. The present case is in this sense clearly distinguishable from the
Greenfield Publishing cases.
There, the individual employee held capable of conspiring with his corporation had both an independent personal stake in achieving the conspiracy’s object and the power to himself institute the anti-competitive policy for his corporation. However, even were this distinguishing feature absent, it is doubtful that we would follow the analysis in that case.
Compare
with
America’s Best Cinema Corp. v. Fort Wayne Newspapers, Inc.,
. See Mich.Comp.Laws Ann. § 450.226 (West 1967).
. That such corporations are often organized primarily for tax and pension purposes does not warrant disregarding their corporate structure under Michigan state law.
See Kline v. Kline,
. E. Kintner, Federal Antitrust Law, Vol. II, § 9.8, pp. 22-23 (1980), discusses and agrees with this proposition.
. The Little Traverse Hospital rule originally required that both medical and trauma cases be referred to a pediatrician and set a higher age limit of 16. With changes in patient load and staffing, however, the rule was modified to its present form sometime prior to the merger of Little Traverse and Lockwood-MacDonald hospitals. Apparently a further informal modification has recently changed the rule so that medical problems are also treated by the emergency room physician if the patient is admitted after midnight. In that circumstance the pediatrician is called for consultation.
. We say “in theory” because the appellants have not actually presented any evidence as to the number of uncommitted children that are actually admitted to NMH with medical problems within the appellants’ range of qualifications. However, finding no evidence to support an inference of conspiracy this deficiency is superfluous to disposition of appellants’ section 1 claims.
. Exclusive dealing contracts are analytically similar to cases involving unilateral refusals to deal in that the defendant has, in an exclusive contract, unilaterally determined to deal only with a single entity.
Compare, United States v. Colgate & Company,
. Unlike
Hyde,
. 15 U.S.C. § 2 provides: Every person who shall monopolize, or attempt to monopolize, or combine or conspire with any other person or persons, to monopolize any part of the trade or commerce among the several States, or with foreign nations, shall be deemed guilty of a felony....
. The District Court may, of course, still dispose of these claims by summary judgment if after development of the necessary facts it determines that no genuine issues of material fact remain for trial.
. NMH provided the District Court with an affidavit disclaiming that any point of competition existed between it and the appellants — all of whom were members of the NMH medical staff. The appellants have provided no contrary evidence.
. The appellants have admittedly not cogently defined a relevant product market. In their initial complaint appellants alleged a conspiracy designed to eliminate them from the practice of “medicine.” In oral arguments before the District Court appellants narrowed their concept of the market to that of “primary care.” On appeal the appellants have focused their arguments on “acute medical care.” Acute medical care, if a market, must include referrals from the emergency room for followup treatment in order to support the appellants’ claims. We assume the appellants intended this version of acute care. Appellants have offered no evidence supporting their shifting definitions of the product market. Such a failure is typically fatal to a plaintiff’s section 2 claims.
See, e.g., Morton Bldgs, of Neb. v. Morton Bldgs., Inc.,
. This area of overlap, if it exists, might conceivably be as narrow as “acute care referrals” or “acute care referrals for follow-up primary care.”
See, e.g., E.I. duPont de Nemours & Co.,
. The record again does not reveal whether ‘ Petoskey is the relevant geographic market for acute care medicine assuming that acute care is a discernible product market. The Burns Clinic may, of course, present contrary evidence to the District Court.
. The сlinic’s monopoly is one created by a contract held lawful in this opinion. See supra, at 954-956. It is not, of course, a necessarily permanent one in that NMH controls its existence through competitive bidding.
. The Burns Clinic apparently maintains, contrary to the District Court’s assertions, primary care services in direct competition with the appellants. This fact must also be evaluated by the District Court on remand.
. Since NMH’s pediatrician role was presumably endorsed and adopted by the hospital and there is no evidence of actual Burns Clinic input much less responsibility in its adoption, it should play no part in the decision on remand.
. This is equally true in the context of section 2 monopolization and attempted monopolization claims. See,
e.g., Times-Picayune,
